Disturbances in the Field (1983) by Lynne Sharon Schwartz. Rohan Maitzen recommended the novel to me because of its unusual use of the Pre-Socratic philosophers. This is a domestic novel, a fine example of, borrowing from Trollope, the way we live now (or, to me, the way they lived then), smart, dense, and insightful. And also full of a surprising amount of Heraclitus and Thales and Parmenides.
The “they” is mostly the narrator Lydia, the New York City
pianist and mother of four, her family, and her close group of college friends
(Barnard College, Class of ’61). I do
not remember reading a similar novel where the college experience is so
thoughtfully integrated into the characters’ lives. The friends bond while taking a year-long introduction
to philosophy from a professor who overindulges in the Pre-Socratics, squeezing
down Plato and Aristotle, because they are so much fun. Just what I have found.
The way up and the way down are one and the same, Heraclitus said, endless and, above all, reversible. (“The Middle of the Way,” 370)
That is from the next to last page of the novel. Thales appears on the last page.
The first half of the novel is about, roughly speaking, ordinary
life and the passage of time. How do
Lydia’s, and her friends’, choices, match up with their youthful ideals? How do those ideals change? What is a good life? Philosophical but also novelistic questions.
Her liberal education served her well. (“Wedlock,” 125)
Schwartz argues, I think, that the liberal arts education of
the characters makes their lives richer.
Not happier, oh no no, but deeper.
The good life is full of books:
The long wall in the living room, where we gather, is lined with bookshelves. The center, most accessible, shelves hold her thick science books. Below, books of philosophy, politics, sociology. Above, novels (Nina is an insomniac; Epictetus does not always work) and poetry: Frost, Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams – she enjoys the sanctification of the ordinary. (“The Philosophy Study Group,” 142)
Although our narrator Lydia is more interested in the
desanctification of the ordinary. A
musician, she perhaps reserves holiness for the Trout Quinter – this is also a
terrific music novel, with a number of insightful passages about music
performance. But in her life, with her
family:
What I wanted now was the adventure of being happy in the ordinary way. (“The Philosophy Study Group,” 160-1)
Disturbances takes a terrible turn exactly halfway
through, when the ordinariness of life is destroyed by a tragedy that becomes
the subject of the rest of the book. I
wondered if now Schwartz would invoke the consolations of philosophy, but she
is more hard-headed than that.
Philosophy does not console, nor does music, nor does anything,
really. This half of the novel is rough
going, emotionally. A chapter entitled “Bed,”
two scenes in which Lydia and her husband work on their grief in their new
king-sized bed, was especially brutal. Disturbances
in the Field and its narrator are the products of second wave feminism – Jill
Clayburgh would have been perfect in a film of the novel – where sex is
discussed without prurience or sentimentality but with an honesty that is, in
this chapter, almost hard to read.
This land of ours, coarsened by blight, cannot endure. It’s only a matter of time. (241, “Bed”)
Rohan, thanks so much for the recommendation. I wonder what Schwartz’s
other books are like.